Blackdown Hills Websites
The Blackdown Hills
The Blackdown Hills form a tranquil, beautiful, and relatively isolated landscape on the Devon and Somerset border. Steep ridges, high plateaux, valleys and springs create a stunning mosaic of countryside dotted with farms, villages and ancient features. This special place is home to wildlife and people, with rare habi
Hemyock Castle, Culm Valley, Blackdown Hills, Devon – Home Page
Remains of a rare moated 14th C. castle. Historical glossaries, resources, & displays: Historic links with Europe; Influential women; Abolition of slavery; WWII stories; Sri Lankan micro-credit
Neroche - liberating the landscape (autumn)
The Neroche Scheme covers 10,000 hectares of the northern escarpment and wooded ridge of the Blackdown Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on the Somerset / Devon border, from Culmstock Beacon in the west to Castle Neroche in the east, and down into the vale of Taunton Deane as far as West Hatch and Orchard Portma
Hemyock - A Village on the Blackdown Hills
a village website with parish council, church, club and event information, and family history pages
Roy Parkhouse's Genealogy Transcriptions
Roy Parkhouse's Genealogy Transcriptions
Suzandy Caned Furniture Restoration
Home page of Suzandy Caning and Furniture with details of all their business ventures
Devon Luxury Self Catering Holiday Cottages, Bidwell Farm 5 Star Self
Bidwell Farm Holiday Cottages, beautifully restored self catering accommodation and bed and breakfast in Devon. Bidwell Farm and its two 5 star cottages sit within the Blackdown Hills – an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty – just two minutes away from the sleepy, Domesday agricultural village of Up-Ottery, Devon. The
Devon Luxury Self Catering Holiday Cottages, Bidwell Farm 5 Star Self
Bidwell Farm Holiday Cottages, beautifully restored self catering accommodation and bed and breakfast in Devon. Bidwell Farm and its two 5 star cottages sit within the Blackdown Hills – an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty – just two minutes away from the sleepy, Domesday agricultural village of Up-Ottery, Devon. The